Pliable Solar Cells on a Roll
klevin writes "New Scientist is running a story on someone else who's developed thin, flexible, photovoltaic cells: 'The thin and bendy solar panels can be stuck to fabrics, sheets or backpacks and promise a go-anywhere electricity supply.' Whatever happened to those sheets of solar cells that some university here in the US developed several years back? As I remember, the concept was that they could be draped across roof-tops and whatnot. Never heard anything after that." We had post about solar building clothing last year.
The poster might have been thinking about Iowa Thin Film Techologies...
To address some of Klevin's confusion, since I've been following solar panel advancements:
Thin, flexible cells have been around for a while. One reason they haven't caught on heavily is because they're nowhere near as 'powerful' (efficient at conversion) as hard panels. Did a quick search (don't take this data *too* seriously, but it represents what's normal); compare panels from these two pages:
Flexible
Solid
Specifically, compare "Unisolar 32 watt flexible solar panel" from the first link to "Shell ST40 thin film CIS 40 watt solar panel" on the second. The flexible panel is 940 sq. inches and 32 watts, while the solid panel 663 sq. inches and 40 watts. Big difference in watt per area.
I ended up choosing a big solid one to fit in the rear dash of my car; flexible would have been easier to deal with, but it won't fold, and produces less power. (I use the panel in my car to power my laptop/cell phone combo while camping and stuff, it's very cool and gets a lot of questions from random interested people!)
Here's another chart to compare the two: Product Page
Tried to find an efficiency rating chart comparing the two types, but no luck. The numbers are out there somewhere...
Yes, you are correct in that, but if you made the sail out of a large, lightweight, flexible solar panel, you'd be generating electricity and momentum.
stuff
Oddly enough, not so much the force but the momentum. And not subatomic particals so much as light. Stars appearently make a lot of light. And that's why solar sails, as opposed to cells, are reflective. The radiation pressure equation would probably provide more insight into this should you wish to investigate further.
Cell phones, and battery powered devices in general are pretty easy to figure out.
If your phone has a 780mAh LIon battery (it does, roughly), then the battery contains 0.78*3.7 (3.7 is the nominal voltage) or 2.8Wh of power. then you figure out how long the battery lasts.
In the case of a phone, just turned on, doing nothing, it probably lasts at least 56 hours. 2.8Wh/56 = 0.05W. The phone is using 50mW of power on average. When you are talking, you probably get about 5.6 hours of talk time. So it's using 0.5W (500mW) on average.
All this is pretty easy to do with battery-powered devices. If you have a wall-powered device you need something to measure the power usage, like a Kill-A-Watt.
They quote 7% efficiency, 1 euro per watt.
Full sun is 1000 watts/sq metre, so with 7% efficiency we get 70 watts/square metre, so it has a cost of 70 euros/sq metre or, at 1.33 euros to the dollar, about $US52.60/sq metre.
Cover a 10 * 4 metre area of roof for $2,100 and get enough energy, in the middle of summer, to boil your 2 kw electic kettle all day.
At 12c per kwH for electricity, @ 2.8 kw * 6 hours/day * 365 days/year gives a cost saving of $735 pa, or a repayment of the $2,100 capital in 3 years
Are these numbers OK?
At this price will it be practical to disconnect from the grid sometime soon?
The memories of a man in his old age are the deeds of a man in his prime - Floyd, Pink
Usually people imagine solar sails as being made of a very VERY thin film,on the order of a few micrometers thick... the point being that there's very little additional mass created by the sails themselves since you need so much surface area to create any appreciable force. Also, the less mass that's used for the sails, the more mass that's available for payload (or just plain not there, which means greater acceleration).
Here's a few links (thanks Google and the obligatory Wikipedia):
A geocities-looking site with some usefull info
Planetary Society has some more info
Wikipedia entry
You may disagree, but to be blunt, you're wrong. -tgd
For the laymen out there, I'll explain this in technical terms. If you have a roughly cylindrical quartz crystal, and if you squeeze it, the crystal lattices "snap" into an alternative arrangement which free's up some electrons and essentially produces a static charge. When you remove the stress, the crystal lattice snaps back into its rest state and wants its electrons back.
Conversely, by applying an alternating current to a quartz crystal, you can make it physically stretch and shrink.
Because a quartz crystal is somewhat like a spring, a given shape/mass/volume of it will possess a resonant vibrational frequency. If you apply a signal to the crystal at or near the resonant frequency, the crystal's vibrational magnitude will increase, just like the famous Tacoma Narrows bridge "Galloping Girdy".
Piezoelectricity is a weird and wonderfull direct mechanical to electrical conversion phenomenon and it is typically used in electronics to convert a sloppy signal into a more precise one, or by utilizing higher harmonic modes, to multiply a lower frequency into a higher one.
Clickety Click
www.oksolar.com/roof/ You can start there :-)
TFA talks about the product entering mainstream production in a couple of years. You can purchase the Iowa Thin Film solar cells now. They're about 7% efficient, as they claim. They're not expensive, and you can get them at a number of distributors. I've personally used Jameco and Sundance Solar.
Several U.S. Companies now provide solar shingles, in fact, my company has two vendors that carry them, they're just not quite popular yet because they're still a tad pricey.
Galen
In your face, and always right!
We are actually unlikly to get much past about 50%
This is the best plant chlorophyl (sp?) systems can get. It is also sad but true that it is extremly rare that machines, silicon or other, significantly out do nature in efficiancy.
HOWEVER, since the average solar energy hitting earth is 1.4 kW/m^2 that means that even at 50% we are taking in 700 w/m^2. Now since the average energy use for a home is 17,130 kw/h that means we will need an average of 24-25 square meters to power a house.
Then of course there is no light at night so we will need to double the area to 50 square meters and add a battery system.
But REGARDLESS at even 50% efficiency we can power most single family american houses with simply the roof area!